Did you Photoshop that?

Filed under Lightroom, Photography, Photoshop, Portraits, Tutorials, Weddings Tags: , , — • Written by Kafeen @ 2:48 pm

A question professional photographers hear constantly.
A quick answer is that if I didn’t use any program to adjust a photograph, then how would it transfer from the camera – magic wand?

The reality is that pros now shoot in raw format, which is a digital negative.
Do some research and see how many of the great photographs of our time, shot on film, were ‘adjusted’ in the dark room.
Using chemicals, the experts in the darkroom could enhance the image to suit their vision.
The choice of film and film speed used in the camera produced different results too.
An example – look in Photoshop for ‘dodge and burn’ – the name comes from darkroom techniques.

So what if you shoot with an automatic setting, saving as a jpg?
Well – you’ve just given the camera manufacturer the gig to interpret the photographic scene, make adjustments, and throw away much of the data to compress the file.
Your negative just got trashed. Jpg is what we call a ‘lossy format’. That term says it all.

There are many processes that professional photographers perform, or pay other professionals for.
These include colour correction, and blemish removal.
Colour correction example – remove the yellow tinge that an old fashioned light has cast on your lovely white gown.
Blemish removal – well, we can remove EVERY blemish if you wish to look like a CGI model.
Or just a little to smooth your skin, same as a little makeup touchup.
Not honest – if you really want honesty, go and throw out all your makeup, perfume, hair colour etc etc

Please remember that professional photography is not ‘hit and miss’.
We’ve spent many years honing our craft and deserve to be paid fairly for our art as well as our skills.

While I’m on my soapbox – if your camera is set on ‘auto’, don’t call yourself a professional.

CS3 and Nikon D90 raw

Filed under Adobe, Camera Raw, Capture NX, General, Lightroom, Nikon, Photography, Photoshop • Written by Kafeen @ 1:31 pm

I was recently emailed about the problem with Camera Raw and the D90. You need Camera Raw V5 and up but that isn’t compatible with CS3. That’s very annoying, isn’t it? Adobe’s Camera Raw download website

So, if you have Photoshop CS3 and buy a Nikon D90, you will need to upgrade to CS4 if you want to use Photoshop to process your raw files.

Alternatively you can buy Lightroom 2 or Nikon’s Capture NX2.
****UPDATE***
The fix – update Camera Raw to version 4.6 and it adds D90 raw file compatibility to CS3.
DOWNLOAD HERE
******************

What do I use – I have a D700 and had the same problem with Photoshop.
I bit the bullet and upgraded to CS4 so that I could use Bridge and Photoshop for the start of my HDR processing. Second step is to save as tif, and open in Lightroom 2 for final adjustments.

Yes, I know Photomatix is the software everyone likes to use for their HDR, but I like the presets I’ve created in Lightroom2. And, I can’t buy EVERY piece of software that I like…i wish….

Here are two of my current favorite HDRs.
I hope you like them too

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